Calspan
Calspan Corporation is a science and technology company originally founded in 1943 as part of the Research Laboratory of the Curtiss-Wright Airplane Division at Buffalo, New York. Calspan consists of 5 divisions: Flight Research, Transonic Wind Tunnel, Systems Engineering, Transportation Sciences Center, and Crash Data Research Center. The company's main facility is in Cheektowaga, New York, while it has other facilities such as the Flight Research Center in Niagara Falls, New York. The company performs flight research at Edwards Air Force Base, California, and has established a research and development division under the moniker of "Bicycle Works" at the Mojave Air & Space Port.[1][2]
History
The facility was started as a private defense contractor in the home front of World War II. As a part of its tax planning in the wake of the war effort, Curtiss-Wright donated the facility to Cornell University to operate "as a public trust" and received a charitable tax deduction.[3] Seven other east coast aircraft companies also donated $675,000 to provide working capital for the lab.[4] The lab operated under the name Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory from 1946 until 1972. During this same time, Cornell formed a new Graduate School of Aerospace Engineering on its Ithaca, New York campus. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, universities came under criticism for conducting war-related research particularly as the Vietnam War became unpopular, and Cornell University tried to sever its ties. Similar laboratories at other colleges, such as the Lincoln Laboratory and Draper Laboratory at MIT came under similar criticism, but some labs, such as Lincoln, retained their collegiate ties. Cornell accepted a $25,000,000 offer from EDP Technology, Inc. to purchase the lab in 1968.[5] However, a group of lab employees who had made a competing $15,000,000 offer organized a lawsuit to block the sale. In May 1971, New York's highest court ruled that Cornell had the right to sell the lab.[6] At the conclusion of the suit, EDP Technology could not raise the money, and in 1972, Cornell reorganized the lab as the for-profit Calspan Corporation and then sold its stock in Calspan to the public.
Calspan was the first in a series of corporate owners that have included Arvin Industries, Space Industries International, Veridian Corporation and General Dynamics.
In 2005, Calspan Corporation was returned to independent ownership when a local management group purchased the Aeronautics and Transportation Testing Groups of the Western New York operation from General Dynamics.
Under the name of Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory were inventions of the first crash test dummy in 1948, the automotive seat belt in 1951, the first mobile field unit with Doppler weather radar for weather-tracking in 1956, the first accurate airborne simulation of another aircraft (the North American X-15) in 1960, the first successful demonstration of an automatic terrain-following radar system in 1964, the first use of a laser beam to successfully measure gas density in 1966, the first independent HYGE sled test facility to evaluate automotive restraint systems in 1967, the mytron, an instrument for research on neuromuscular behavior and disorders in 1969, and the prototype for the Federal Bureau of Investigation's fingerprint reading system in 1972. CAL served as an "honest broker" making objective comparisons of competing plans to build military hardware.[5] It also conducted classified counter-insurgency research in Thailand for the Defense Department.[5] By the time of its divestiture, CAL had 1,600 employees.[5]
Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory conducted wind tunnel test on models of a number of skyscraper buildings, including most notably the John Hancock Tower in Boston, Massachusetts.
References
- ↑ Deaver, Bill "EKAD's 'Git 'er done' reputation earns $1.7 million grant", Mojave Desert News, reposted at Mojave Airport website
- ↑ Jaffe, Raphael, "Mojave Air and Space Port thriving", Aerotech News and Review
- ↑ "Curtiss-Wright Corp. Gives Lab to Cornell; To Aid Air Research". Cornell Daily Sun: p. 2. Dec 21, 1945. http://cdsun.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/newscornell?a=d&srpos=6&cl=search&d=CDS19451221.2.1.6&e=--------20--1----Cornell+Aeronautical+Laboratory-all. Retrieved 2009-10-18.
- ↑ "Aircraft Companies Donate Gift To Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory". Cornell Daily Sun: p. 2. Feb 15, 1946. http://cdsun.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/newscornell?a=d&srpos=4&cl=search&d=CDS19460215.2.2.1&e=--------20--1----Cornell+Aeronautical+Laboratory-all. Retrieved 2009-10-18.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Zuckerman, Edward (Sept. 18, 1968). "Trustees Accept Firm's Offer of $25M for CAL Purchase". Cornell Daily Sun: p. 1. http://cdsun.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/newscornell?a=d&srpos=7&cl=search&d=CDS19680918.2.1.2&e=--------20--1----Cornell+Aeronautical+Laboratory-all. Retrieved 2009-10-18.
- ↑ "Court Ruling Okays Planned Sale of CAL". Cornell Daily Sun: p. 1. May 13, 1971. http://cdsun.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/newscornell?a=d&srpos=39&cl=search&d=CDS19710513.2.1.5&e=--------20--21----Cornell+Aeronautical+Laboratory-all. Retrieved 2009-10-18.
External links
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